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05-14-2024 08:56 AM - edited 05-15-2024 09:08 AM
I prefer the "then and now" 2 picture idea. That way old high school friends will recognize you as well as those who know you now...in your later years.
One other thing...when I get to Heaven I believe all wrinkles will be gone and I will be young again!
The optimal age here on earth is between late 20's and early 30's so I think that's about where God would have us be!!!
05-14-2024 10:11 AM - edited 06-02-2024 05:34 PM
05-14-2024 11:03 AM
When my 92 year Mom passed we used a beautiful picture of her from the late 30s, as we all loved that photo. Why is this so different then all the Facebook graduation pics that constantly show up DHs and my feeds ( now that we've passed 50 year H.S.grad mark) to announce the obituaries of classmates who have passed? These now appear once or more a month.
05-14-2024 02:44 PM - edited 05-14-2024 02:51 PM
To me it's the same issue of going to a funeral, viewing the deceased and tsk tsking about how they didn't look like themselves, didn't look well ('ya think?), and on and on. The makeup wasn't right etc.
Some people do NOT want to be viewed. Some people are old and disfigured. Go to any nursing home and ask how'd YOU would like to be pictured. Then or now?
Honestly, nobody's business but the deceased and the family.
05-14-2024 02:50 PM
I think the issue of photos is one that is personal to an individual or family.
For instance, my mother died seven months ago and was not quite 97. For 20 years she was blind, had dementia, and also cancer. Although we kept mom at home, and I documented her life in photos and videos throughout her illness and decline, my mother for many years looked nothing like the attractive wife, mother, and hair stylist that most folks would recognize. Almost no one came to see her during her last 20 years. So, for my mother's obituary, I used a photo that I took when she was about 73. That photo showed my mother as happy, smiling, and well.
My dad, who died at age 91 in 2018, had a stroke five years before he died. But even in his last week, paralyzed and struggling, he looked facially like himself. I used two photos for his obituary: one of him as a young man in his Navy uniform and another of him in his last year. Dad was lucid enough to help write his own obituary and to plan his final church and graveside service.
05-15-2024 12:50 AM
I think a fairly recent picture is appropriate but I would chose what ever the person submitting the obituary likes. I think most people reading them, scan for names they might recognize and not necessarily the picture first.
05-15-2024 09:12 AM - edited 05-16-2024 10:13 AM
If you actually know the person who died, the picture chosen by either the deceased or the family should not matter.
Gee, if someone has not aged well - especially due to what finally killed them, is it really necessary to depict them as they looked just before death? Wow.
05-15-2024 01:03 PM
My mother died in March. She has always looked 25+ years younger than she was. I don't think I would have even recognized her at the end. When I looked at her in her casket at the funeral, I burst into tears. I had not cried at all until then. The woman she had become after my brother died was totally unrecognizable (personality and looks). But, the makeup artist made her look like her vibrant self, not like a woman who was ready to pass. I'm glad people got to see her like they'd known her for so long.
05-15-2024 03:53 PM
My mom had dementia for almost 8 years before she passed at age 87. We chose an obituary picture of her taken just before she was diagnosed. She looked so nice in that photo.
When Dad saw the obit he remarked, "Doesn't your mom look great, just like when she was in High School." They were married for 68 wonderful years. And even when she had dementia and was completely oblivious to what was going on around her, he still looked at her with love in his eyes.
I miss them both every single day.
05-15-2024 06:34 PM
@Daisy Sunflower I was going through the posts to see someone have the same idea as I do. Some interesting thoughts and preferences.
I don't want any service or obituary. I have already paid for my space for my ashes in my church Columbarium which is cheaper than a cemetary plot. Where my parents are buried isnt an option as no more room.
I have a Living Trust and I was surprised my attorney felt the same way? I have essentially no family and few friends.
I buy myself flowers often remembering my Mother said she wanted flowers when she was alive not dead.
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